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2 - Energy Trade Control and Environmental Protection

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  30 April 2024

Sherzod Shadikhodjaev
Affiliation:
KDI School of Public Policy and Management
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Summary

Governments may impose a carbon emission charge to address environmental externalities. If implemented, this will drive up the cost of energy-intensive production. To level the playing field, domestic carbon pricing can be extended to carbon-embedding imports. The recent legislative movements in the EU and elsewhere show that the issue of adjusting carbon prices at the border is entering the mainstream of climate policymaking. At the same time, carbon is not the only target of energy-affecting trade control measures. Other typical examples of such measures include air quality regulations with import-restrictive impacts and the localization of clean energy production, which some States may portray as environmentally necessary. Products with health-threatening content associated with unsafe energy use can face market access barriers as well. When energy production causes ecological or public health problems at home or depletes natural resources, export restrictions are usually among candidate measures that governments consider for mitigating such adverse effects. Therefore, it is imperative to examine trade rules and case law to check the legality of these energy–environment measures.

Type
Chapter
Information
Energy and the Environment
Exploring the Nexus under International Economic Law
, pp. 57 - 98
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2024

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